This week on the New World Next Week: Rule by emergency is getting out of control; the anti-TikTok bill has nothing to do with TikTok and everything to do with controlling your online activity; and the globalists are openly gloating that their technocratic controls are reducing the population.
This week on the New World Next Week: The Dutch continue the worldwide revolution against the technocrats; the Library of Alexandria is still on fire; and the mainstream conspiritainment purveyors suddenly discover one of the 29 hijacked 9/11 planes.
This week on the New World Next Week: Silicon Valley Bank gets a case of the runs as the world careens toward the CBDC nightmare; the NED is up to its old colour revolution tricks in Georgia (again); and the US military is now openly experimenting with pulsed energy weapons for neurological warfare.
This week on the New World Next Week: the UN admits geoengineering and proposes that they should regulate it; the latest Iran nuke hysteria is a giant nothingburger; and there is more to the new anti-CBDC bill in US congress than meets the eye.
This week on the New World Next Week: Ohio Chernobyl produces the largest dioxin plume in history; sanctions on Syria interfere with earthquake relief aid; and the Bing Search AI chatbot goes rogue and starts threatening people.
This week on the New World Next Week: the balloon hysteria pops but China hysteria is just building; the no-alternative media attempt to revive the old homeland security fraud in the name of partisan flag-waving; and Pervez Musharraf dies at 79.
This week on the New World Next Week: Brazil and Argentina prepare to form a common currency; smart appliance manufacturers sad that people are not connecting their toasters to the internet; and a Utah doctor is facing charges for saline shots and simple sabotage.
This week on the New World Next Week: Finland teaches its citizens about media literacy; Oxfordians are already pushing back against the 15-minute city idea; and Lukashenko abolishes copyright in Belarus (kinda sorta not really).